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RESOURCES ON THE STRUGGLE AGAINST POLICE BRUTALITY

6/14/2020

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Read our Statement on the murders of Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd and Breonna Taylor

Last Week Tonight (June 7, 2020)- As nationwide protests over the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor are met with police brutality, John Oliver discusses how the histories of policing and white supremacy are intertwined, the roadblocks to fixing things, and some potential paths forward.

TAKE ACTION

The following links are taken from Claire Lampen’s article “
How to Support the Struggle Against Police Brutality.”

​Direct aid for victims’ families:
  • George Floyd’s family has started a GoFundMe to cover funeral and burial costs; counseling services; legal fees; and continued care for his children. There’s also a GoFundMe to provide for his 6-year-old daughter, Gianna Floyd, and a GoFundMe to support “peace and healing” for Darnella Frazier, the woman who filmed Floyd’s death.
  • Another GoFundMe is raising money for Ahmaud Arbery’s mother, donations to which will similarly fund the family’s legal battle.
  • There’s a GoFundMe for Breonna Taylor’s family, to help with legal fees and offer extra support.
  • There’s a GoFundMe for David McAtee’s mother and family: McAtee was fatally shot just after midnight on June 1, after police officers and National Guard members fired into a crowd of people who were not taking part in the evening’s protests.
Bail funds: ActBlue has a page that will let you split your donation between 38 community bail funds, or if you’d like to focus your donation directly, here are some options.
  • The Bail Project, a nonprofit that aims to mitigate incarceration rates through bail reform.
  • The National Bail Fund Network also has a directory of community bail funds to which you can donate, along with a COVID-19 rapid response fund.
  • Another list of bail funds is available here, and another list of bail funds by city.
Support for protesters:
  • A Gas Mask Fund for black youth activists in Minneapolis is raising money to buy gas masks for demonstrators who’ve faced tear gas during protests.
  • The Black Trans Protestors Emergency Fund is raising money for physical resources, bail, and medical care for black, transgender protesters, which will be redistributed to black, trans-led organizations “in the event these funds don’t need to be used.”
  • The NAACP Legal Defense Fund, which supports racial justice through advocacy, litigation, and education.
  • The Legal Rights Center is a non-profit law firm based in Minneapolis, offering legal defense, educational, and advocacy services.
  • Black Visions Collective, a black, trans, and queer-led social justice organization and legal fund based in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
  • The Know Your Rights Camp, an organization founded by Colin Kaepernick that provides education and training in black and brown communities, set up a legal fund for Minneapolis protestors.
  • Organizations working against mass-incarceration and police abuse:
  • Communities United for Police Reform is an initiative to end discriminatory policing in New York, helping to educate people on their rights and document police abuse.
  • Showing Up for Racial Justice works to educate white people about anti-racism and organizes actions to support the fight for racial justice and undermine white supremacy.
  • Communities United Against Police Brutality, which operates a crisis hotline where people can report abuse; offers legal, medical, and psychological resource referrals; and engages in political action against police brutality.
  • No New Jails NYC aims to keep the city from constructing new jails, and to instead divert funds that currently go toward the police and incarceration toward housing, ending homelessness, mental health, and other community support systems.

Tangible Ways to Support Black Lives
  • Black Lives Matter
  • Showing Up for Racial Justice
  • CongregateCville
  • NAACP
  • Minnesota Freedom Fund to help protesters set bail and bond, etc.
  • Support Black-owned restaurants in Charlottesville
 
  • Online application for Absentee Voting in Virginia (for June 23 Primaries. June 16 deadline to request absentee ballot).

Ways to Engage Right Now – Each One Counts

Note: Below is an excerpt of an email from Collective Impact Forum.

If you’re wondering what steps to take, here are some things that can help.
Listen. Learn. Give. Center.

Listen:

Listen to communities of color. Understanding what Black, Brown, or Indigenous people need to thrive is crucial right now.
Please don’t assume.
  • Ask. Ask them right now what they need from you.
  • Listen. Listen to what your community members say.
  • Trust. Trust what they say is what they need right now.

Learn:

If you are struggling with what is said above or what is going on right now in our world, a good step is to visit some resources to support your own learning. Everyone is learning at their own pace. Remember to not expect or task your Black colleagues and community members to teach you right now. They do not have the time or energy to lay things out again. If you are feeling challenged and wondering where to start, seek out resources like the ones listed below.

Books: These books are available in print, ebook, and audio.
  • How To Be An Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi
  • So You Want to Talk about Race by Ijeoma Oluo
  • Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan Stevenson
Resources:
  • Anti-Racism Resources
  • 75 Things White People Can Do for Racial Justice
Follow: There are many excellent organizations leading the field on supporting racial equity. Here are just a few to follow that can support your learning.
  • PolicyLink
  • Philanthropic Initiative for Racial Equity (PRE)
  • Equity in the Center
  • Race Forward

Give:

It’s become a pandemic cliché to say “Now more than ever,” but it’s still true. Now, more than ever, giving is essential. Whether it’s giving money, time, or compassion.
  • If you are an institutional funder: please give. Please don’t wait for the perfect time or strategy. Please give to organizations that are led by and for people of color. Give to organizations that are advocating and organizing against anti-Black racism. Fund movement-building infrastructure to advance racial justice
  • If you are an individual donor and are able to give: even a small donation can support anti-racist work in your community right now
  • Showing up to support local Black-run businesses and organizations is also a form of giving
  • Donating time (even virtually as many of us still shelter in place) can also be helpful.

See “Listen” above. If your communities are asking for something to be given, if you can, please give.

Give compassion.

“Now more than ever” is the time to spread your compassion and empathy. So many are feeling pain, exhaustion, fear, and grief. Your compassion and love can be a real gift.

Center:

It’s very necessary to center the stories and experiences of Black lives and other people of color, and what they are going through. Center their narratives and what they are experiencing. Use those experiences as a light to guide your actions.

Be wary of “easy” narratives that pin blame on communities of color. Like using a stereotype to quickly code someone, narratives are also tools to quickly divide and understand.

Parse your media intake - who is being centered? Whose experiences are “the protagonist”? At this time of heightened racial violence and inequity, if the story “protagonist” is not Black or Brown, use that as an indicator to reassess that media source and what narrative they are trying to give you.

Our own media literacy (including social media) is a key learning area right now. Following media outlets and sources that are authored by and for Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities is a crucial step to improve one's own media literacy, especially if you want to unlearn harmful narratives that you may be unknowingly carrying with you.

#BlackLivesMatter

For people of color in the Collective Impact Forum community, we see you. We see your pain and grief. We see the injustices you have and are experiencing. You do not deserve to feel this way. No one should. This burden should not be yours. It should not be anyone’s.

For our Forum community - Let us all do what we can to overcome anti-blackness and racism in our systems and communities.

Listen. Learn. Give. Center. And Support each other.

Robert Albright, Director, Collective Impact Forum
Sheri Brady, Associate Director, Aspen Institute Forum for Community Solutions
Jennifer Splansky Juster, Executive Director, Collective Impact Forum
Tracy Timmons-Gray, Associate Director, Collective Impact Forum


LEARN - Articles
  • A reading list to understand police brutality in America - Vox.com
  • The anger behind the protests, explained in 4 charts - Vox.com
  • 'A riot is the language of the unheard,' Martin Luther King Jr. explained 53 years ago - TheWeek.com
  • George Floyd video adds to trauma: 'When is the last time you saw a white person killed online?' - USAToday.com
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RESOURCES for COVID-19

6/14/2020

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TAKE ACTION
 
SupportCville.com
SupportCville.com has the most comprehensive list of support (financial, supplies, housing, food, etc.) in our community.

Below are a few organizations where you can donate to support our community:

  • Charlottesville Area Community Foundation’s Emergency Response Fund 
  • Give to a specific local organization established at the Community Foundation.
  • SupportCville.com has more organizations you can donate to. 
  • Public Housing Association of Residents (PHAR) Cville
  • The Monacan Nation
  • SURJ is promoting a stimulus check donation drive to help especially those who are undocumented, incarcerated, do not have social security numbers, or home addresses . Click here for more information and to pledge. Here’s a report on how SURJ Charlottesville has contributed to Covid-19 Mutual Aid. 
  • #50forFood - Cville Community Cares is partnering with Sin Barreras to raise $50,000 for immediate distribution to Charlottesville-area residents who are experiencing food insecurity. Commit your stimulus check for this aid by donating at https://congregatecville.com/. 

LEARN

“Shepherding Through a Pandemic” Informational Session on COVID-19 for Faith Leaders

On May 27, Dr. Jeanita Richardson (Professor of Public Health Sciences at UVa's School of Medicine) gave a presentation on “Shepherding Through a Pandemic,” focusing on what faith leaders need to know about the COVID-19 pandemic and how to prepare for the reopening of their congregations.

Below you will find supporting information from the presentation.

  • Zoom link to the Video of the Presentation. Password: 4M.@2nyl
  • Slide Deck of the Presentation
  • Rough Notes of the Presentation
  • “We’re Going to be OK” - Tips and advice book for children

PDF Handouts mentioned by Dr. Richardson
  • Cleaning and Disinfecting Your Facility - CDC
  • COVID-19 Symptoms
  • COVID-19 “Staying Alive” Poster
  • COVID-19 Info Flyer
  • How to Protect Yourself and Others
  • Stop the Spread of Germs
  • Virginia Forward - Phase One for Religious Services

Links:
  • Center for Disease Control’s COVID-19 webpage
  • Center for Disease Control’s COVID-19 print resources (offered in different languages)
  • Virginia Department of Health’s COVID-19 webpage (includes statistics shown during presentation)
  • Thomas Jefferson Health District’s COVID-19 data portal (stats broken down by race, ethnicity, gender, age, etc.)
  • Virginia’s PHASE ONE Guidelines webpage
  • Thomas Jefferson Health District’s COVID-19 Data Portal

ARTICLES: COVID-19 and Race
  • PolicyLink.org recently published an article advocating for a “Common-Sense, Street-Smart Recovery” to build an inclusive economy and equitable nation that works for all. It includes these principles: 1. Center Racial Equity, 2. Put People First, 3. Invest in Community Infrastructure, 4. Build an Equitable Economy, and 5. Protect and Expand Community Voice and Power. Read the article here. 
  • Black Americans dying of Covid-19 at three times the rate of white people - TheGuardian.com
  • COVID-19 Killing African Americans at Shocking Rates - MedPageToday.com
  • What Do Coronavirus Racial Disparities Look Like State By State? - NPR.org
  • Why “essential” workers are treated as disposable - Vox.com
  • How the coronavirus exposed health disparities in communities of color - WashingtonPost.com
  • Racism, Not Genetics, Explains Why Black Americans Are Dying Of COVID-19 - ScientificAmerican.com

Comments

"Shepherding Through a Pandemic" Presentation

5/27/2020

Comments

 
This morning, Dr. Jeanita Richardson (Professor of Public Health Sciences at UVa's School of Medicine) gave a presentation on “Shepherding Through a Pandemic,” focusing on what faith leaders need to know about COVID-19 pandemic and how to prepare for the re-opening of their congregations.

Below you will find supporting information from the presentation.

Zoom link to the Video of the Presentation. Password: 4M.@2nyl

Slide Deck of the Presentation

Rough Notes of the Presentation

“We’re Going to be OK” - Tips and advice book for children


PDF Handouts mentioned by Dr. Richardson
  • Cleaning and Disinfecting Your Facility - CDC
  • COVID-19 Symptoms
  • COVID-19 “Staying Alive” Poster
  • COVID-19 Info Flyer
  • How to Protect Yourself and Others
  • Stop the Spread of Germs
  • Virginia Forward - Phase One for Religious Services

Links:
  • Center for Disease Control’s COVID-19 webpage
  • Center for Disease Control’s COVID-19 print resources (offered in different languages)
  • Virginia Department of Health’s COVID-19 webpage (includes statistics shown during presentation)
  • Thomas Jefferson Health District’s COVID-19 data portal (stats broken down by race, ethnicity, gender, age, etc.)
  • Virginia’s PHASE ONE Guidelines webpage
Comments

Notes: Gov. Northam's webinar for faith leaders re: COVID-19

3/24/2020

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3/27/2020 UPDATE:
Here’s the link to the official resource guide for faith leaders
sent by the Governor’s office and the Virginia Department of Health’s
Office of Health Equity.


This is a SYNOPSIS of a statewide webinar for faith leaders on Monday, March 23, 6:30 pm, hosted by the Office of Governor Ralph Northam and the Office of Health Equity of the Virginia Department of Health. (I cannot vouch for the 100% accuracy of my notes. Please contact the persons who presented this information to fact-check or confirm.)

On March 23, Northam issued Executive Order Fifty-Three that orders the closure of certain non-essential businesses, bans all gatherings of more than 10 people, and closes all K-12 schools for the remainder of the academic year. Governor Northam is also urging all Virginians to avoid non-essential travel outside the home, if and when possible. This order goes into effect at 11:59 PM on Tuesday, March 24, 2020 and will remain in place until 11:59 PM on Thursday, April 23, 2020. This order applies to houses of worship.

Dr. Vanessa Walker-Harris - Deputy Secretary of Health 
Explained the salient points of that Executive Order.
This executive order:
  • Closes public and private K-12 schools through the end of school year.
  • Closes non-essential ‘Brick and mortar” businesses for 30 days
  • Bans public gatherings of more than 10 people. 
  • Urges Virginians to avoid non-essential travel outside the home.

Dr. Megan Healy talked about Unemployment Benefits
If you are laid off and/or NOT getting a paycheck, you are encouraged to apply for unemployment benefits here. (This advice applies to faith-based workers whose organizations have not paid payroll taxes in the past. Currently, these workers are NOT eligible to receive benefits, but that rule may change in the coming days.)

Karen Kimsey - Virginia Medicaid is Taking Action to Fight COVID-19
  • Ensuring members do not lose coverage due to lapses in paperwork or a change in circumstances
  • No co-pays for any Medicaid
  • 90 days supply of many routine prescriptions
  • No pre-approvals needed and automatic approval extensions for manu critical medical services
  • Outreach to higher risk and older members to receive critical needs
  • Encouraging use of telehealth
Visit https://coverva.org/

Heidi Hertz - Feeding Virginia during COVID19
Students and children:
  • 100% of schools providing meals to children 0-18 yrs old
  • Innovative strategies being used such as drive up and bus routes deliveries
  • Text “FOOD” or “COMIDA” to 877-877 (for closest feeding sites & times to you)
  • Longer breaks means additional need
Community and family resources:
  • Food banks and pantries are frontlines;
  • visit www.211virginia.org to access services

Tracey Wiley - Financial Resources Update - 
Visit https://www.sbsd.virginia.gov/ for information about low-interest loans for small businesses and non-profits.

Curtis Brown, VA Dept of Emergency Management (VDEM)
Disaster Funding Available through FEMA

CULTURAL IMPACT - Suja Amir, who is on the Governor’s Asian American Advisory Board - member of Asian Latino Solidarity Alliance of Central VA
  • Census is now more important than ever - online or by paper
  • Increasing hostile sentiments toward Asians - verbal and physical attacks
  • Spike in white supremacists toward Jewish communities

CALL TO ACTION - 
  1. If you have a service (clothes closet, food pantry, etc), please register it with 211.org, so that you’re part of the collective impact in supporting your community. 
  2. Subscribe for email updates from Governor Northam. (Look for “Subscribe for Email Updates” light blue box on the bottom right of the webpage.
  3. Fill out the Faith Leader Survey - very important to let Governor’s office know the following:
    1. What are your biggest concerns/needs that you are hearing from your congregation/community as it relates to the COVID-19 crisis?
    2. What resources does your congregation/community provide that could support the COVID-19 crisis response?
    3. How can the government/governor assist you in your congregation/community response to the COVID-19 crisis?
  4. Contact United Way (Virginia) and Urban League if you need help. They are your allies!​
Posted by Michael Cheuk, Secretary, Charlottesville Clergy Collective
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COVID-19 Resources for Charlottesville & Congregations

3/20/2020

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IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW NEEDS SUPPORT:

Cville Community Cares: Is offering mini-grants for people impacted by COVID-19. There are no restrictions regarding how funds will be used: Request up to $200 per household. Apply here.  (This form will temporarily close at 8pm on Friday March 20th, in order to prioritize the 1000+ requests they have received.)

WAYS TO GIVE AND RECEIVE SUPPORT:

Support Cville - this is the most comprehensive website listing ways for people to give and receive support. 
  • Link to contribute to local nonprofits, restaurants and UVA students.
  • Link for ways to receive money, supplies and services.

DONATE to COVID-19 SUPPORT FUNDS

  • Charlottesville Area Community Foundation
  • United Way COVID-19 Crisis Relief Fund
  • Alliance for Interfaith Ministries
  • LOVE in the name of Christ

BLUE RIDGE AREA FOOD BANK
  • Needs healthy volunteers to work at the food bank. See their statement on COVID-19 and their Volunteer page. To find volunteer opportunities, click on this link.

FREE INTERNET ACCESS

In addition to hopping on free wifi hotspots at local restaurants and public schools, COMCAST Xfinity is now offering free hotspots to anyone who needs them for free, including non-Xfinity Internet subscribers. For a map of Xfinity WiFi hotspots, visit www.xfinity.com/wifi. Once at a hotspot, select the “xfinitywifi” network name in the list of available hotspots and then launch a browser.


CONGREGATIONAL RESOURCES
(credit: United Methodist Church)

Resources for Digital Ministry
https://novaumc.org/digital-ministry-resources/
At the bottom of this page is a 60plus minute zoom class that Kim Johnson taught specifically to help people do digital ministry in the midst of the c-19 situation

Online Worship Tutorial
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V40ArSqS2Tg&feature=youtu.be
Pastor Sam Plymale on the Greene Charge has put together this youtube video to assist you with offering worship on FB, livestream, etc.

Live Stream your Ministry PDF
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1L6hPf-imd3PQgBs4roaMOnoCRyK-Mgij


Recording Worship PDF
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1Pmkp_9O9l1kHI4KtG8LJ2Tl625rPu1ft


ONLINE FINANCIAL SUPPORT AND GIVING

Here are some suggestions about trying to continue receiving financial support while we are not physically meeting.

10 ideas for church financial leaders amid the covid-19 crisis

Understanding E-Giving Slideshow

CHURCH GIVING PLATFORMS (not an endorsement of the services below)
Tithe.ly -
$0 setup cost
  • Mobile giving w/ iOS / Android app
  • Online giving and mobile kiosks
  • Cash/check gift entry and recording
  • Event registration and management
  • Debit, Credit & ACH/Bank payments
$0/ month   | 2.9% + 0.30 per transaction
ACH/Bank: 1% + 30¢   | AMEX: 3.5% + 30¢


Paypal for Non-Profits - 
  • The standard rate for a PayPal nonprofit business account is 2.9% + $0.30 per domestic transaction.
  • Qualified 501(c)(3) organizations can receive a discounted charity rate of 2.2% + $0.30 per domestic transaction. Get started at paypal.com/charities.
Comments

Conversation with Jonathan P. Walton

6/4/2019

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Jonathan P. Walton is an area ministry director for InterVarsity Christian Fellowship‘s New York/New Jersey region. He previously served for ten years as director of the New York City Urban Project. He writes regularly for Huffington Post, medium.com, and is the author of three books of poetry and short stories.
​
Jonathan talks to Michael Cheuk about his book, Twelve Lies That Hold America Captive: And the Truth That Sets Us Free.

Additional resources recommended by Jonathan:
​
  1. 2030 Calling: Here is a vision video of what we're hoping to do by 2030.
  2. Emotionally Healthy Activist: I would LOVE for a group of folks in Charlottesville to do the pilot of our emotionally healthy activist course. Total it will be 8 sessions. 
  3. Podcasts: you can search for IVED on i-Tunes and check out our podcasts or click here. 

Originally published (with transcript) at 
​http://michaelkcheuk.com/conversation-with-jonathan-walton/
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Conversation with Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove

5/23/2019

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​Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove is a speaker, spiritual writer, who, along with his wife Leah, founded Rutba House a house of hospitality where the formerly homeless share community with the formerly housed. He has also worked with the Rev. William Barber on the Poor People’s Campaign. Rev. Wilson-Hartgrove talks to Michael about his 2018 book Reconstructing the Gospel: Finding Freedom from Slaveholder Religion.
Originally published (with transcript) at 
​​http://michaelkcheuk.com/conversation-with-jonathan-wilson-hartgrove/.
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Historical Markers of Racism in Charlottesville

8/11/2018

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These "historical markers" were posted on the walls of The Haven during our Interfaith Service as part of our attempt to acknowledge the history of racism and white supremacy in Charlottesville. Many thanks to Rev. Albert Connette of Olivet Presbyterian Church for researching this history and displaying it in such an artistic manner.
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Dr. Leslie Kendrick to Lecture @ Congregation Beth Israel

10/26/2017

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Professor Leslie Kendrick, will lecture on "Free Speech, Hate Speech, and Equality" on Sunday, October 29, 4:00 p.m., at Congregation Beth Israel, O'Mansky Hall. The lecture is free and open to the public.

​Professor Leslie Kendrick is the vice dean of the University of Virginia School of Law, from which she received her law degree in 2006. She joined the school as a faculty member in 2008, after clerking for U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Hackett Souter and Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III '72 of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.  She received a B.A. in classics and English as a Morehead Scholar at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She earned her master's and doctorate in English literature at the University of Oxford, where she studied as a Rhodes Scholar.

Her scholarship, which aims to understand the big-picture questions about why we have freedom of speech, has appeared or is forthcoming in the Virginia, Harvard, Columbia and Michigan law reviews. She is past chair of the Torts and Compensation Systems Section of the Association of American Law Schools and is a member of the Harvard Higher Education Forum. In 2014, she received the Carl McFarland Prize for outstanding scholarship by a junior faculty member.


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Staying Safe at Protests. How to Respond Non-violently

7/6/2017

Comments

 
Peaceful protest is our right. But, other groups may attempt to intimidate us with violence. To prevent our non-violent demonstration from becoming a show of their violence, here are some tips. It is easiest to defuse a problem before it explodes.
  • If you feel uncomfortable or intimidated, immediately move or leave the area.
  • If you see weapons or you feel threatened or you observe suspicious behavior, call the police immediately and leave the area.
  • If you are surrounded, don’t panic. Move to the periphery of the crowd.
  • If someone appears to be in danger, intervene calmly. Emotional actions beget emotional responses.
  • If a person abuses you verbally, do not respond. Reasonable discourse in this situation is futile. Verbal abuse is used to anger, demoralize and provoke. Do not take the bait.
  • If you face aggression and choose to engage, know that an aggressive person is not likely to listen to you. Have an escape route.
  • If it is possible, look for creative ways of isolating and calming aggressive people, by building a positive relationship with them: “I want to listen to you but I am having trouble when you are shouting….”
  • If you are attacked, follow the attackers directions; do not fight back.
  • If an attack occurs, try to remember details so you will be a good witness.
remember: WE ARE NOT AFRAID
Stay Safe

Many thanks to the Charlottesville Center for Peace and Justice for these tips.
You can download a flyer with these tips as a flyer or pocket guide on their website: ​​https://protestprotection.org/.
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